Here are the details of our bungalow. The room had a double bed, with
1metre free space around it, a television, air conditioning. There
were no steps inside.
The bathroom was without the typical aspects of disabled bathrooms,
but it was
very large, with free spaces under the lavatory and more than 65 cm near
the water closet. In the little garden of the bungalow, there is a
shower with a little step (3 cm) down, but it is not necessary to go into
the shower because there is free space near the shower where, if you
have a travel-wheelchair for the bath you can clean yourself, and the water can go into the
garden (around the garden there is an high wall 1,90 m).
We have the bath chair solution on the website:

There are also
steps at the bungalow’s door, but the tour operator Cormorano has a
wonderful resident manager (Marcello Besson). He is the person who
resolved the step problem by putting two little wooden ramps
at
the bungalow doors. One bungalow door opens onto the beach and the other door
opens on a
little path where you can use to go to the restaurant, bar, shopping center,
diving center, massage/fitness center etc).

Every site at the resort is without accessibility problems.

To visit the beach
and to enter in/out the sea, the tour operator’s resident manager
obtained for us a local person (6/8 h at days) to help my boyfriend with
the travel-wheelchair for bath we have. We paid him about 150/200.

Activities: with a little help, a paraplegic person can go on a catamaran
(sail boat), and snorkel (the local teacher has a specific
acknowledgement to teach disabled people). You can go fishing at night
because the boat is very large and adapted for a wheelchair. If you are
lucky and catch some local fish, you eat it at the
restaurant. In the evening, you can gamble with
people from every part of the world who make bets over an animal-shell
race (named pacuro). They write a number on the shell and play
during a song time. The winner is the first shell to cross the goal.